Wal-Mart Pulls Plug on Smallest Store Format, Shuts 269 Stores

Wal-Mart said Friday it will pull the plug on its smallest store format, Walmart Express, and close 269 locations as it contends with higher costs in its home market of the United States and disappointing results overseas.

The move includes Wal-Mart’s largest-ever single culling in the United States, where the company is closing 154 stores. The other 115 stores are in Latin America, including 60 in Brazil.

The world’s largest retailer said it hoped to transfer many of the 10,000 U.S. and 6,000 Latin American workers in the closed stores to other locations.

Wal-Mart’s earnings have been under pressure due to last year’s decision to raise entry-level wages as well as higher investments aimed at closing the gap online with Amazon.com Inc . At the same time, Wal-Mart is struggling overseas, where a strong U.S. dollar reduces the value of local sales.

Wal-Mart said the closures represented less than 1 percent of its global revenue. The biggest cuts are in the United States, including all 102 Walmart Express stores.

At 12,000 to 15,000 square feet, Express stores are less than one-tenth the size of a typical Walmart Supercenter. The format had been in pilot since 2011 but did not deliver the desired results.

Moody’s retail analyst Charlie O’Shea described the closures as a long-overdue “pruning.”

“I’ve always wondered why it’s taken so long to cull the U.S. store base because they really haven’t done much of it over the past several years,” O’Shea said.

Wal-Mart said the move would reduce earnings by 20 cents to 22 cents a diluted share, with nearly all of that to be booked in the fourth quarter ending this month. In November, it forecast a full-year profit of $4.50 to $4.65.

The company’s shares fell 2.6 percent to $61.39.

The other 52 U.S. stores to be closed are a mixture of Supercenters, Wal-Mart’s largest format; discount stores; Neighborhood Market groceries; and outlets in the company’s Sam’s Club bulk-selling wholesale chain.

The closings highlight the challenges Wal-Mart faces in finding growth opportunities in both its home market, which it has blanketed with some 4,500 stores, and overseas, where it has grown to more than 6,000 locations but has struggled to generate consistent returns.

In an internal memo to staff, McMillon said a regular review of the company’s assets was vital for growth. “Doing this ensures we focus and align our resources in ways that build a strong company positioned to win in the future,” said the memo, which was seen by Reuters.

The Arkansas-based retailer said it would still open 142 to 165 stores in the United States in the year ending in January 2017. For the first time, it also disclosed plans to open 200 to 240 stores overseas in the coming year.

The company said about 95 percent of the closed U.S. stores were within 10 miles of another that it owns, making it possible to move some workers to other locations. It said it would provide 60 days of pay and severance for eligible workers not placed.

The cuts drew criticism from a group backed by the United Food & Commercial Workers International Union, which for years has been behind a campaign pushing for better wages and benefits for Wal-Mart employees.

“Sadly, these latest store closings could very well be just the beginning,” Jess Levin, communications director at Making Change at Walmart, said in an emailed statement. “This sends a chilling message to the company’s hard-working employees that they could be next.”

Follow Us via Email

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Authors

About Us

Welcome to Views From The Lake. We believe in providing the public with transparency and giving them a platform for open communication. So we created this blog to provide you with timely market information as well as relevant financial news and economic updates. Please make sure you visit this blog often to be kept up to date on our many discussions.